Oskanian: Turkey’s Preconditions Mean Nothing From Standpoint Of Int

OSKANIAN: TURKEY’S PRECONDITIONS MEAN NOTHING FROM STANDPOINT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.12.2007 16:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "The Armenian-Turkish relations represent a very
complicated issue burdened by the past. But however difficult they
are, a solution is needed. And the only way to resolve problems is
to normalize relations," Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
said during The Armenian-Turkish Relations: Problems and Prospects
extended parliamentary hearings.

"Turkey wants fulfillment of its preconditions first and only then
establishment of diplomatic relations and opening of the border. But
it’s not right. The international community rates opening of the
border as the primary condition. Show me a European state which kept
borders closed because of problems with neighbors," the Minister said.

He reminded of Turkey’s three preconditions: 1. resolution of the
Karabakh problem in favor of Azerbaijan; 2. recognition of present
day Turkey’s borders; 3. renunciation of international recognition
of the Armenian Genocide.

"Neither of the preconditions is admissible for Armenia. The
Armenian-Turkish relations can be divided in three stages: from
1991 to 1993, when Turkey recognized Armenia’s independence without
establishing diplomatic relations; from 1993 to 1998, when Turkey
used the Karabakh factor (recognition of the Genocide was not
on the RA agenda at that time) and from 1988 up to the present
day… Nevertheless, from these preconditions mean nothing the
standpoint of international law," he said.

Zvartnots Is Safe And Secure

ZVARTNOTS IS SAFE AND SECURE

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 18 2007

Today President Robert Kocharyan and the head of the General Department
of Civil Aviation Artem Movsisyan met and discussed the new building of
Zvartnots airport, the airport off Gyumri and other issues relating
to aviation. Artem Movsisyan informed that the concessionaire of
Zvartnost has already bid for the construction of a new building for
check-in, security and border control, which will be soon extended
to the government.

According to the head of the General Department of Civil Aviation,
the number of passengers in 2007 totaled 1.5 million which is up by
half a million from 2003 and 2004.

Artem Movsisyan also presented the results of the security and safety
audit of Zvartnots by ICAO. The results suggest that faults are 7
percent compared with an average of 40 of other countries.

They also discussed the involvement of the renovated airport of Gyumri
in the flights and organizational documents of the European airlines.

The Swiss Federal Court condemns a denier of the Armenian Genocide

Bern, December 19, 2007

PRESS RELEASE OF
THE SWITZERLAND-ARMENIA ASSOCIATION
Contacts :
Co-presidents of the SAA Sarkis Shahinian +41 76 399 16 25
and Andreas Dreisiebner +41 79 671 86 19
[email protected] |

The Swiss Federal Court condemns a denier of the Armenian Genocide

The Swiss-Armenian Association has learnt with great satisfaction of
the Federal Court’s ruling published today that the President of the
Party of Turkish Workers, Dogu Perinçek, has been condemned as guilty
of racial discrimination (article 261bis of the Penal code). Dogu
Perinçek had repeatedly asserted in 2005 that the genocide of
Armenians in 1915 – during which about 1.5 million Armenians were
killed – is an `international lie’. Dogu Perinçek has been
definitively condemned with a conditional fine, a fine and has been
ordered to pay

all expenses related to the legal procedure. The Federal Court brings
with this judgment, which constitutes precedence, a lot of clarity and
consequently a world première regarding legal recognition of the
Armenian genocide.

With this decision Switzerland’s highest legal authority, leaves no
doubt as to the fact that the events of 1915 correspond well and truly
to genocide (as has previously been decided at the Police Court and
the Court of Cassation of the Canton of Vaud), as related to the
agreement of the UN of 1948 defining the crime of genocide.

It appears that this is the first time globally that a supreme court
of criminal law has pronounced a condemnation for denial of the
Armenian genocide. Swiss justice has thus demonstrated its
independence; it notably did not allow to pressure exerted by Turkey
to influence its decision. Thus, the Federal Court is contributing to
the prevention of genocide and other

crimes against humanity by preventing the reproduction of contemptuous
behaviour and by guaranteeing justice and respect for human
dignity. The Federal Court considers that the negation of the genocide
of Armenians constitutes a threat to the identity of the Armenian
people. The Federal Court has also asserted that the condemnation of
Dogu Perinçek contributes to the protection of human dignity amongst
the Armenian community, the dignity which identifies itself with
respect for the memory of the genocide of 1915.

With its decision, the Federal Court also sends a signal to other
countries inviting them to develop national legislation so that the
denial of all genocides, including the genocide of the Armenian
people, is penally condemned.

The judgment of 12th December 2007 – a memorable date since it
coincides with the day that the Federal Councillor Christophe Blocher
was dismissed – also shows that the article of law on the prevention
of racism, which is so frequently attacked, in fact presents the
justice

with no difficulty in application. On the contrary it is a useful and
precious tool. Therefore, the attempted revision of the measure
against racial discrimination which was introduced by the head of the
Federal Department of Justice and Police (in his position only for a
few more days), is revealed to be quite useless.

www.armenian.ch

Dink Requested Pennington To Help Improve Relations

DINK REQUESTED PENNINGTON TO HELP IMPROVE RELATIONS

A1+
[06:45 pm] 17 December, 2007

"I worked in Ankara and met with Azeri reporters before arriving in
Armenia," US Charge d’Affaires Joseph Pennington said during today’s
meeting with Armenian reporters.

Reporters wanted to know the U.S. attitude to Article 301 of Turkey’s
Penal Code which envisages punishment "for endorsement of the Armenian
genocide."

According to Pennington the U.S. Government has announced many times
that Article 301 hinders freedom of speech.

In reply to A1+’s question how the USA reacts to Turkey’s tough
stance towards Armenian-Turkish relations Joseph Penington said,
"The U.S. government calls on the two countries under question to
start a dialogue as it stems from the interests of both countries."

Today the U.S. Charge d’Affairs recalled his meeting with Hrant
Dink. During his tenure in Ankara he learnt that he would continue his
diplomatic mission in Armenia. He arranged a meeting with Dink over
the telephone. They met and discussed a number of things, including
Armenian-Turkish relations.

I visited Dink’s editorial office in front of which he was later
tragically assassinated. We walked to his favourite restaurant and
talked for about two hours.

Dink was a brilliant personality. During the meeting Hrant Dink kept
saying that he is proud of being Armenian but he also loved Turkey. He
gave Pennington useful information on a number of issues. Finally
Pennington asked Dink how the USA could help the two countries. Dink
asked Pennington "to help improve the relations."

Prague’s Cinematic Jukebox

PRAGUE’S CINEMATIC JUKEBOX
by Jonathan Gainer

PopMatters, IL
03/pragues-cinematic-jukebox/
Dec 14 2007

The turning leaves weren’t the only autumnal attraction back in Prague
this October. For its fourth year, the MOFFOM festival – short for
Music on Film, Film on Music – unspooled in a kaleidoscopic gaze at
our musical past and present. Over 60 filmmakers and musicians from
21 countries made their way along with 10,000 viewers to Prague’s Kino
Lucerna, Europe’s oldest, and arguably most beautiful, cinema complex.

As a niche festival centering on the infinitely-variable genre of the
music film, MOFFOM combines ardent affection for both mediums with
a belief that bringing the two together will produce a transcendent
sensory experience. "The films have a smaller audience than narrative
features do," MOFFOM Program Director Keith Jones told me, "But they
have enormous power, both to entertain and to inform, because they’re
truthful and honest and based in reality."

They also offer rarefied glimpses at musical contexts unknown outside
musicological circles. It was like stepping into Aladdin’s lamp,
complete with surround-sound. And by lacing an ambitious five-day
schedule of celluloid seances with shin-digs and live performances,
the festival format seemed to pay homage to Prague’s century-spanning
alchemical traditions while enticing participants to ponder the
interrelationship between sound and screen.

"Seeing a piece of visual art can really change the way I perceive
reality and my place in reality," says multi-instrumentalist and
composer Fred Frith, whose musical and cinema compositions are
the subject of this year’s MOFFOM retrospective. "I think hearing
something can do that, too. And in some ways, hearing reaches places
that visual things cannot reach."

While music in fiction film usually punctuates or underscores the
emotional resonance of stories, many of the documentary films on view
reversed this relationship. In screening after screening, music was
the story: alongside punk, funk, jazz, reggae and avant classical
performers, there were also Iranian santour, Belgian chanson, Russian
underground, tango, jazz, samba, nomadic, country and fado musicians.

It was almost too much to see, too much to hear, were it not for the
genre’s ability to root the grooves and leitmotifs in communities
beyond earshot.

My first eye-opener was the role a mansion in the New York Berkshires
played in mapping and expanding the history of America’s native art
form, jazz. Legendary indie-producer Ben Barenholtz (Barton Fink
Requiem for a Dream) presented his directorial debut film, Music
Inn, which chronicles the evolution of a 1950’s summer hideaway for
musicians into the first "school for jazz" and the context of legendary
collaborations. Roundtable discussions led by musicological sages
Alan Lomax and Marshall Stearns united so many pioneering virtuosos
that it would be easier to cite the ranks of canonical jazz masters
who did not attend. What emerges is a gripping portrait of a milieu
converging upon its own history, and in so doing finding the confidence
to riff its way through an ever-widening legacy.

One branch of that improvisational heritage is freestyle hip-hop,
which director Kevin Fitzgerald tracks with his grainy, flava-laden
documentary Freestyle: Tthe Art of Rhyme. Taking the lacerated,
street-level texture of hip-hop mix tapes as an aesthetic mandate,
Fitzgerald weaves a battle-cycle between reigning rhyme-slinger
Supernatural and contender Craig G. into a polyphonic tableau of this
combative urban sub-culture and its precarious lyricism.

With projector lights cooling for the day, audio and visual contingents
converged in the high splendor of the Cafe Lucerna, a sensuously
smoky, art nouveau interior that might have been dreamt-up by Gustav
Klimpt on opium, but which was actually the brainchild of President
Vaclav Havel’s grandfather, who commissioned the space in 1911 as
the gastronomical centerpiece of his burgeoning entertainment complex.

Don Letts, renowned musician of Big Audio Dynamite fame and director
of two festival films – George Clinton: Tales of Dr. Funkenstein
and Clash on Broadway – is midway through a DJ set that will dump
the entire contents of the Mothership onto a raunchily appreciative
dance floor. It is here, in this transformed salon-de-la-funk, that
the festival’s lifeblood most vibrantly pulses.

As airline bottles of vodka donated by a sponsor are imbibed
with flagrant DIY spiritus, a spontaneous consensus arises that
our cortexes have been blissfully singed by the radical chic of
Julien Temple’s Joe Strummer- the Future is Unwritten. Aft of the
bar I encounter John Caulkins, Founder and Director of MOFFOM, in a
conversation with Susan Dynner about punk’s legacy. Dynner’s film,
Punk’s Not Dead, is a tightly-woven swan song to the durability of
the punk spirit, sung by a hydra of 81 talking head-thrusters. But
where is Punk now? "Experimenting with new forms," Caulkins says,
"Whether out of revolt, or purely musical intentions, or something
provocatively intimate – that’s where punk is now."

"Did I hear someone ask where punk’s at now?", inquires music
journalist Tom Pryor. "Punk’s standing right behind you," he says,
nodding at Kevin Fitzgerald. "The man had to pinch footage to finish
his film, but when the owners saw the finished product, they granted
him rights to use it because they recognized his achievement."

As Fitzgerald is deservingly feted, conversation segues into
inter-medium appropriation. "Look at About a Son," says Keith Jones,
referring to AJ Schnack’s film about Kurt Cobain’s antecedents. "It
stands on its own as an art film about the despair of growing up in a
kind of post-industrial American bleakness. But because Cobain’s name
and personality are attached to it, it drew a large audience, a fan
base that might not be exposed to that normally. But now that they
have been, maybe they’ll make those connections and take them further."

Jones’ film Durban Poison – co-directed with Michael Lee and Deon
Mass and screening in an out-of-competition section of the festival –
is a documentary testament to the precariousness of such connections.

The filmmakers originally aspired to chronicle the transformation of
the Stable Theatre in Durban, South Africa, from an apartheid-era
locus of creative dissent into a post-apartheid platform for Zulu
nationalism. They planned to document renowned musical dramatist
Mbongeni Ngema (of Sarafina fame) at work on a musical about the
theatre’s history, hoping that, in the process, concentric fields
of metaphors would blossom about the relationship between drama and
historical memory.

But like the history it was chasing, the project’s reality proved ever
elusive as prominent advocates of the theatre were brought down by
political corruption inquiries and a rather funny sex scandal. The
filmmakers then dolefully spun the camera to document their own
frustration at the project’s tragic outlook midway through production,
but the situation spun back, this time as farce with the instant,
unexpected celebrity of director Deon Mass, whose X-Factor-spinoff
reality show had a meteoric spike in popularity.

Giddily parlaying this new cache into leverage on the Stable project,
the filmmakers set upon the theatre with renewed if quixotic vigor.

As the film proceeds towards its denouement, tonal inconsistencies
suggest a waning in directorial unison, but a serenade to street
children on a nocturnal Durban beach belies a flicker of optimism for
the Stable’s – and Africa’s – spiritual future within the shorter-term
eclipse of the project.

Up continent, the attempts of Nigerian singer-activist Femi Kuti to
channel the ferocious rhythms of an even more troubling and corrupt
political situation are chronicled with the hectic and distraught
resilience of its subject in Dan Ollman’s Suffering and Smiling. I’d
heard the music before, and had even seen Kuti play live. But seeing
footage of him struggling to find rhythm for his rage at a president
who had headed the Nigerian military at the time its soldiers threw
his grandmother out a window added a new dimension to both the man
and the music.

The difficulty with using presidents as muses seems a familiar refrain
in the cinema of protest music. Carla Garapedian’s Screamers explores
Californian heavy metal band System of a Down’s outrage at the Turkish
government’s denial of the Armenian genocide. And Barbara Kopple
and Cecilia Peck enthrall Prague audiences with their 2006 Shut Up &
Sing, which follows the Texas-based Dixie Chicks in their fight to
maintain dignity and a country-music fan base while radio networks
ban their music and patriots burn their CDs following their criticism
of George Bush and the Iraq War.

"It’s nice seeing a festival founded by Americans show films like this
in Rumsfeld’s ‘New Europe’", says Hary Jordanov, a Prague resident from
Bulgaria I meet at Lucerna. And while politics is not a deliberate
part of the MOFFOM program, festival-founder Caulkins has lived in
Prague for 15 years and is sensitive to his host city’s perception of
it. "If there is a message, it’s about spreading the music and giving
a wide audience the chance to see good films," Caulkins tells me. His
success at attracting an ever-increasing proportion of corporate
sponsorship makes the festival more sustainable by the year, while
keeping ticket prices charitably low guarantees its accessibility.

On a more personal note, Pavla Fleischer’s film, The Pied Piper of
Hutzovina, which took third place in the competition, accompanies
Ukrainian gypsy singer-songwriter and Gogol Bordello frontman Eugene
Hutz on a search for familial and musical roots in a Gypsy Diaspora
reaching from Carpathia to Siberia. Hutz’s hip-hop and punkish
variations on gypsy idioms are fiercely rejected by a renowned
orthodox Romanista composer, provoking movingly humble reflections on
his musical and spiritual migration. Later, when his genre-bending
innovations are embraced by virtuoso Sascha Kolpachov, Hutz’s idol,
the ensuing ambivalent calm suggests that the natural state of an
emigres identity is one of perpetual flux.

The festival’s one narrative feature to draw big audiences is John
Carney’s aptly-titled Once (which was shown twice, after an initial
sell-out prompted a second screening). A long-shot at Sundance, it took
that festival by storm, and single readers in America might remember
this romantic comedy about busker and Frames-frontman Glen Hansard’s
bittersweet affair with a Czech flower-girl as 2007’s unlikely
midsummer date movie. It was one of the festival’s uber-moments,
when Czech directorial eminences Jizi Menzel, Jan Svenkmayer and Jan
Hrejbek turned up in the same audience to inspect the indie arriviste.

Film festivals have a distorting effect on perception after a few
days. The transformative, alchemical mix of screenings and performances
and parties melts the boundaries between characters while stories
blend and overlap – ‘festival-head’, some call it. The vodka-providing
sponsors are partly to blame for this. Seeing Hansard step into the
Lucerna Cafe after I’d seen both his movie and live performance that
day provoked a prismatic reflection on both man and music.

If his fictionalized character was more neatly-constructed than the
complicated history scorched into his real-life features, his voice
on stage was larger than film. In fact, my ears were still ringing
with the profane and soulful vengeance of that voice, which lent
authority to his persona as the troubled romantic hero of a narrative
feature. The musician and his fictionalized persona seemed symbiotic,
even complimentary, and I found myself imagining the day as a kind
of musical conversation between Hansard and his simulacrum.

Only hours earlier, Frith had described to me a very different
relationship to a version of his real-life ‘character’ frozen in
Nicolas Humbert and Wernaer Penzel’s gorgeous 1990 cinema-verite
masterpiece Step Across the Border. "Every time I saw myself opening
my mouth on screen," Frith explained, "I sort of cringed with
embarrassment. What it told me to do was to learn how to let go of
certain aspects of myself. So in the end, the process of making and
watching the film was like a process of shedding a skin. It allowed
me to get rid of a lot of things. So when I see the film now, I don’t
even see myself. I see this rather peculiar character gallivanting
around the place doing strange things with strange people."

Perhaps it was the advanced festival-head, but I started thinking,
crazily, that it might be good to ban narrative feature films in
South Africa. What if the political corruptibles in Durban Poison,
denied a feature-fix, could have a Frithian shedding experience when
confronted with the cringing realities depicted in the film? It was
just a thought, and happily I kept it to myself, but recalling the
burners of Dixie Chicks CDs, I still think it might be a viable policy
for Texas. Then again, they might be proud of it.

Midway through the festival’s wrap-up party-actually another spirited
throw-down-word spread that Raul de la Fuente’s Nomadak Tx, a doc about
traveling Basque txalaparta musicians, has won the festival’s highest
laurel, the Audience Award. It’s a watershed moment for the organizers,
because the film that viewers have chosen is a formal embodiment of
MOFFOM’s highest principles. The txalaparta, a marimba-resembling
instrument made of sonorous, parallel shafts, is one of the world’s
only instruments played by two people in communication.

The documentary follows two txalaparta virtuosos on their visits to
Shamanic musicians in India, singing herders in the Arctic Lapland,
nomadic Mongolian horsemen, and Bedouins in the Algerian Sahara.

Using music as a lingua franca, the musicians build a new txalaparta
in each destination out of indigenous materials (in the arctic,
ice-blocks are used) and incorporate local musicians and motifs into
the music they record. As the film builds to its crescendo, a visual
montage re-visits steps in their journey while an audio track remixes
the voices and rhythms of these communities separated by history,
language and geography into a conversation that is pure music.

* * *

Prague’s MOFFOM festival takes place each year in late October.

http://www.popmatters.com/pm/features/article/515

Questions That May Occur To Both Europe And US

QUESTIONS THAT MAY OCCUR TO BOTH EUROPE AND US
Hakob Badalyan

Largir , Armenia
Dec 13 2007

In an interview with the Financial Times the prime minister of
Armenia Serge Sargsyan pronounced a stance on the Armenian and Turkish
relations which contradicts to the line of official Yerevan.

The point is that Serge Sargsyan stated that for Armenia wants Turkey
to enter the European Union because it may foster the improvement of
the relations of Armenia and Turkey. Meanwhile, it is known to everyone
that official Yerevan urges the EU to stipulate that Turkey should
recognizer the Genocide and open the border. Serge Sargsyan’s stance
is closer to Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s vision of Armenian and Turkish
relations rather than the policy worked out by Robert Kocharyan and
implemented by Vardan Oskanyan. Perhaps it is not accidental that
during the rally on December 8 Levon Ter-Petrosyan had criticized
Kocharyan’s and Oskanyan’s approach toward the Armenian and Turkish
relations and noted that Serge Sargsyan’s stance is more rational
and practical. In fact, Serge Sargsyan was not late for proving
with action that the observation of the first president, although he
had hardly aimed to confirm Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s statement when he
spoke about the Armenian and Turkish relation in an interview with
the British newspaper.

It is clear that Serge Sargsyan’s purpose was different, namely to
appeal to Europe as a politician who is open, free from the ties of
nationalistic thinking, close to modern perceptions. Presently it
is difficult to evaluate if he will succeed because words should be
supported by actions, in other words, Serge Sargsyan should prove
with action that he is such, namely with regard to the Armenian and
Turkish relations. After all, Europe not only reads Serge Sargsyan’s
pronouncements in the Financial Times but also in the Armenia media.

In a briefing a few months ago he had stated on the closure of Radio
Liberty in Armenia they call Robert Kocharyan and him a Turk but they
tolerate even that. Therefore, the question may occur if the word Turk
is associated with the notion of a neighbor and a partner or it is,
nevertheless, a word which takes our prime minister immense effort
to display tolerance.

Besides, there are questions that arise from the interview of Serge
Sargsyan with the Financial Times. Namely, when he notes that if
Turkey enters the EU, its relation with Armenia will improve, does
Serge Sargsyan mean the recognition of the genocide and lifting the
blockade, the two cornerstones of this relation, after the entry of
Turkey to the EU? For its part, does it mean that Armenia will stop
urging the countries of the EU to offer these issues to Turkey as a
stipulation? Besides, does the pronouncement of the prime minister
suggest that Armenia is going to withdraw the recognition of the
genocide from its foreign political agenda and will prefer discussing
it with Turkey rather than a third country?

Presidential Candidates Present Declarations About Their Real Estate

PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES PRESENT DECLARATIONS ABOUT THEIR REAL ESTATE

Noyan Tapan
Dec 12 2007

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN. The 9 candidates nominated to run
in the presidential elections to be held in Armenia on February 19,
2008, have presented declarations of their property and incomes for
the past year.

According to information that the Central Electoral Commission
(CEC) submitted to Radio Liberty, the first Armenian president Levon
Ter-Petrosian declared as personal property a detached house of the
total area of 813.5 square meters in Yerevan’s Tsitsernakaberd Highway,
a land plot of about 10 thousand square meters in the same place,
and a 311-square-meter area of public importance in Koryun Street. The
candidate did not buy or sell real estate in the reported year.

The head of People’s Party, chairman of ALM Holding Tigran Karapetian
has joint property of about 290 square meters in Aygedzor district,
he purchased joint housing property of about 43.5 square meters in
Griboyedov Street in the reported year. He has his manufacturing
property in Komitas and Mamikoniants Streets of the total area of
about 2,003 square meters. He also has a production land plot of over
1,000 square meters in Komitas Street.

The chairman of the National Democratic Union Vazgen Manukian has a
360-square-meter house in Baghramian Avenue, an attic of about 175
sq. m., and a land plot of about 178 sq.m.

The vice speaker of the RA National Assembly Vahan Hovhannesian has
apartments of the total area of about 120 square meters in Koryun
and Khachatrian Streets as joint property, as well as a land plot of
3,300 sq.m. in the village of Arinj of Kotayk marz.

The chairman of the "National Unity" Party Artashes Geghamian has
housing property of about 106 sq.m. in Mashtots Avenue.

The head of the "National Agreement" Party Aram Harutyunian declared
housing property of about 50 sq.m. in Lvov Avenue.

The prime minister Serge Sargsian has joint housing property of 96
sq.m. in Stepanakert.

The chairman of the "Orinats Yerkir" Party Artur Baghdasarian and the
former advisor to the NKR president Arman Melikian have not indicated
any real estate as their property in the submitted declarations.

The section "Cultural Values and Antiques" was filled in only in the
declarations of Serge Sargsian: 18-20 century antiques, 32 canvases
of modern painters, works of Armenian painters Bashinjaghian, Sarian,
Minas, Hakobian and Gyurjian were indicated.

Ashkhabad Agreement Opens Large Window To World For Armenia

ASHKHABAD AGREEMENT OPENS LARGE WINDOW TO WORLD FOR ARMENIA

2007-12-11 12:51:00

ArmInfo. "The agreement recently signed in Ashkhabad between
the governments of Turkmenistan and Iran about cooperation on
construction of a new Uzen (Kazakhstan) – Kizyl-Kaya – Bereket-
Etrek (Turkmenistan) – Gorgan (Iran) railway will, undoubtedly,
contribute to facilitation of the feasibility study of Iran- Armenia
railway construction project", deputy Chairman of the parliamentary
Commission on economic issues Vardan Bostanjyan told ArmInfo.

He said that it is difficult to reevaluate the importance of two
railway projects to Iran for Armenia. "Our northern ways are limited
and, in essence, the project may become a large window to the world
for Armenia", the deputy said. He added that parallel fulfillment of
the two projects will enable Armenia to carry out a more intensive
exchange of goods not only with Iran but the Central Asian countries
and China a well. "It is not a secret that railway carriages are
the most cheapest in the world, so direct railway communication will
undoubtedly reduce the transit expenses on the way of the goods to
the Asian countries and intensify the trade relations", V. Bostanjyan
emphasized and added that the first fruits of implementation of the
railway projects will fall on the mining industry.

As ArmInfo was told in the Embassy of Kazakhstan in Armenia, the
total cost of Uzen- Gorgan railway project makes up $620 mln, its
length makes up 670 km, the supposed volume of carriages the first
year makes up 5,5 mln tons.

The diplomats expressed interest in construction of Iran-Armenia
railway, having informed that they have already held negotiations
with RA Ministry of Transport, considering the project implementation
prospects. They said that the Embassy set a task of increasing the
goods turnover between Armenia and Kazakhstan, and the transport
problem is the main obstacle today.

Russia Will Stop Being A Collapsing Empire And Will Become A Strong

RUSSIA WILL STOP BEING A COLLAPSING EMPIRE AND WILL BECOME A STRONG STATE
Naira Hayrumyan

KarabakhOpen
11-12-2007 17:43:56

The Russian president Vladimir Putin has thought long on how Russia
should develop. He chose a way which favors both Russia and its
neighbors. Evidence to this is the positive reaction of the Russian
and foreign politicians that followed the news that the political
parties in the Duma support Dmitry Medvedev for the post of president.

Russia has been an empire for several hundreds of years. The country
continues to make efforts for gathering its scattered parts and
supporting its imperialistic aspirations. Nevertheless, Russia lacks
internal policies on social affairs and democracy. Russia sells gas
all over the world, while 60 percent of its settlements lack gas
supply. Russia would not "let go" the post-Soviet states threatening
with economic sanctions, while the provinces of the same country are
wrecked with poverty.

"Logically" the new race of weapons is the continuation of the
imperialistic policy. The "eagles" came to power in Russia, and it
turned out that trade in weapon may generate as much profit as oil
and gas.

"Under the auspices" of the deputy prime minister Sergey Ivanov Russia
started to incite anti-West moods, especially in the post-Soviet
space. Moreover, in Armenia and Karabakh, for instance, politicians
do not oppose by their ideologies (communism vs. democracy or
liberalism vs.

socialism) but by being pro-Russian or pro-West. The Russian propaganda
machine is set for creating an image of a Western foe. Any event
is viewed in the light of the Russia-West confrontation. Again the
notions of "we" and "they" is put forward. And all this pursues
two aims – imperialistic aspirations and front for operating the
military industry.

In fact, under Putin considerable efforts were made in the country,
the economic situation has stabilized, social problems have started
solving.

However, the imperialistic aspirations do not allow Russia to attend
to their internal problems, for it takes much effort and money to keep
opposition in Georgia and Ukraine, take over the Armenian industries,
oppose to the independence of Kosovo, support the nuclear program
of Iran.

However, Russia seems to realize that it is more useful to be a strong
state than a dissolving empire. Putin’s choice means that Russia
decided to deal with its own problems and not to spoil relations
with neighbors, spend money on a meaningless race and cooperate with
other states.

Russia seems to have understood this. Apparently, Azerbaijan has also
understood this. It is not accidental that the politicians of this
country hurried to state that if Medvedev is elected, the issue of
recognition of unrecognized states will be brought up again, and
not in favor of Russia and the other metropolises. Apparently Baku
realizes that the imperialistic aspirations of Russia hinder the
resolution of this issue. And if Russia gives up on its aspirations,
the others will have to follow Russia.

State Budgetary Revenues Grow By 28.2%, Expenditures – By 23.5% In J

STATE BUDGETARY REVENUES GROW BY 28.2%, EXPENDITURES – BY 23.5% IN JANUARY-OCTOBER 2007 ON SAME PERIOD OF LAST YEAR

Noyan Tapan
Dec 11, 2007

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The revenues and official transfers
of the RA state budget made 442 bln 946.7 mln drams (about 1 bln 271.4
mln USD) in January-October 2007, growing by 28.2% as compared with
the same period of 2006.

According to the RA National Statistical Service, the state budgetary
expenditures made 437 bln 806.4 mln drams in January-October 2007,
growing by 23.5% on the same period of last year. The surplus of the
RA state budget amounted to 5 bln 140.3 mln drams.